Archive for the 'FYI' Category

Reading for Monday Sept 9th

by Dr. H - September 6th, 2013

Thanks for everyone for voting! The results were:

Chapter 16 = 9 votes
Chapter 17 = 11 votes
*Chapter 18 = 19 votes
*Chapter 19 = 16 votes

Chapter 20 = 1 vote
Chapter 21 = 17 votes
*Chapter 22 = 20 votes
*Chapter 23 = 19 votes

*Chapter 24 = 15 votes
Chapter 25 = 13 votes
Chapter 26 = 11 votes
*Chapter 27 = 15 votes

*Chapter 28 = 16 votes
Chapter 29 = 13 votes
Chapter 30 = 15 votes
*Chapter 31 = 19 votes

The starred/bolded chapters will be our main focus in each of the 4 units and will be the subject for the workshops and unit written exams. The other chapters you will be mainly responsible for reading on your own, at your own pace, and you will take open-book online quizzes on them during each unit. You will get a complete syllabus page on Monday with all the details.

Your reading assignment for Monday is from Chapter 16 (Intro, Conclusion, and pp 484-500 only) and Chapter 17 (Intro, Conclusion, and pp 510-527 only) of Henretta, America: A Concise History or ACH as it’s called on the syllabus.

Have a great weekend, enjoy the sunshine!

Reminders for Friday, Sept 6th

by Dr. H - September 5th, 2013

For Friday’s class:

Read the syllabus thoroughly. I handed it out in class, but you can also access it anytime from the sidebar of this site or from Blackboard as a downloadable full-color PDF or view it online as a flipbook.

Read the handout I provided summarizing each of the Henretta textbook’s chapters (here’s the handout if you need it again). Decide on TWO for each unit that you are most interested in. Bring the handout back on Friday with your favorites marked.

Read ACH (the smaller red/brown textbook, America: A Concise History) Chapter 15 and be prepared to talk about different possible meanings for the word “Reconstruction.”

And lastly, write your first SkillBuilder paper (SB #1) using the document you received in class on Wednesday. Detailed instructions for these papers are found in the syllabus and under the “SkillBuilders” tab on this website (also head to that page if you missed class on Wednesday and didn’t get a document). Review the SB guidelines carefully for length, format, and how to submit them!

Footnotes – Slides, Advice

by Dr. H - March 26th, 2011

Here’s the slides I used on Friday to explain the intricacies of footnotes.

Footnotes.HI 112 Spr11

View more presentations or Upload your own.

If you need more help with how to make a footnote, or what “Chicago Style” is see Diana Hacker online, or the CMS Quick Guide. If you’re curious about why it’s called “Chicago Style,” well… I’ll just say it has nothing to do with pizza.

End of Fall 2010 Term

by Dr. H - December 18th, 2010

Thanks for a great semester, everyone!

–Prof. Hangen

Exam 1 Feedback

by Dr. H - September 29th, 2010

This past weekend, I read an interesting editorial essay in the Boston Globe Magazine from a college senior who’d done a semester abroad in Britain, which has an entirely different model of higher education from ours. I was struck by something he said: since they have only a weekly “tutorial” with their instructors, students must be self-directed and treat schoolwork as if it’s their job. Which… it is. Consequently, they spend hours studying, or as they put it, “revising.”

The results of Exam 1 suggest that some of you may need to take the coursework more seriously, but also, that many of you may benefit from strengthening the skills of independent studying – since, as I explained the syllabus, we cannot cover everything in class. You need to be aware of how you learn best, and make sure that you are taking responsibility for your own learning. Knowledge is not something “the professor gives you,” it is something you make for yourself.

Especially if your Daily Work grade and your exam grade are both below where you want them, then answer these questions honestly:

1) Do you do the assigned textbook reading, before class?

2) Do you take notes in class?

3) Are you spending 2-3 hours of studying on your own, for each hour of classtime (i.e. 6-10 hours a week)?

4) During that study time, do you take notes on the textbook? Highlighting is not the same as note-taking.

5) Do you copy over, revise, or index your class notes? See below for recommended reading on some handy methods and suggestions about how to do that.

6) Are you using any of the tools on Norton Study Space? Those include flashcards, quizzes, map exercises, and a printable outline of each chapter.

If you answer “No” to any of those questions, then those should be your first fixes to improve your performance in this class.

If you answered “Yes” to all of them, and you still did poorly on the exam or you are struggling with the Daily Work and the Document Responses, then please schedule a meeting with me during my office hours. Perhaps we can identify where your trouble lies, and brainstorm a strategy to go forward, possibly with the assistance of the (free!) tutoring service of the Academic Success Center here on campus.

Recommended Reading:

Advice for Students: Taking Notes That Work (Stepcase LifeHack)
Geek to Live: Take Study-Worthy Lecture Notes (LifeHacker)
The Cornell Note Method (HackCollege)
More Free Cornell Method Forms Here

DR Footnotes Guidelines

by Dr. H - September 15th, 2010

I’ve added the PowerPoint slides to the “DR” page, and I’m also embedding them here, to help you as you write your Document Responses each week. Starting this week, papers without correctly cited footnotes cannot earn more than a score of 1.

DR Footnotes Guide

View more presentations or Upload your own.